The Secret Staircase (A Wendover House Mystery Book 1) (11 page)

BOOK: The Secret Staircase (A Wendover House Mystery Book 1)
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Sighing, I pulled out a bent tablet covered in crabbed writing and peered into the gap to see what was sticking. Amid the pens and paperclips and other normal desk detritus there was a gun.
A nine millimeter, black, fairly new and very ugly.
The barrel was pointed right at me.

I didn’t touch it.

A dueling pistol or a derringer, or even a blunderbuss or fowling piece, I would have accepted without question since they went with the antique theme of the house. But this modern thing was out of place in this elegant and aged desk. And why the heck had my great-grandfather wanted it anyway? Did he have cause for worry about either of his neighbors? Or had he gotten senile and perhaps paranoid? Was that why Bryson Sands had not been friendly?

I closed the drawer carefully, wanting nothing to do with that handgun or the questions it raised.

Feeling unnerved and wishing to reclaim my upbeat mood, I began dusting the library shelves, straightening books and reading titles as I arranged them. My favorite find was an Ansonia clock, about seventeen inches high and made of brass. It was so elegant that it looked like it belonged on a fireplace in Versailles. I hadn’t wound any of the clocks in the house, but if I found the key, this one would be put to use.

There were some blank spots on the shelves and the books that remained were in some disorder. Kelvin had obviously not been fanatical about his shelving. Amid the expected volumes about maritime law and state history, I found a book on witchcraft which had fallen behind a stack of almanacs. Normally this was something that would interest me, but for the time being I left it alone. It was getting late and I didn’t want to read anything disturbing before bed. The day had been lovely and I didn’t want to jinx it.

On a high shelf I found the family Bible. It was a brute of a book and the leather cover was cracking along the spine. I set it on the desk and opened it carefully, reading through the names—Kelvin, Kelvin, more Kelvin—then Grandma. The entries stopped there.

Because she had run away, married a man and changed her name instead of him changing his to Wendover.

And she had daughters instead of Kelvins.

And the eldest daughter had had a daughter.

Now I was back on the island but there was no Wendover in Wendover House. Was I supposed to find some man to marry who would change his name and start having baby Kelvins again? Was this what Harris—and maybe others—secretly expected? The idea was disturbing but it made a kind of sense.
If you were crazy enough to believe legends and had missed the whole women’s movement.

I found a folded paper tucked in the back of the Bible. It wasn’t signed, and the handwriting was slightly larger and more rounded than what I was used to, but I was pretty sure that the note had been penned by my grandmother.

 

I can’t do it. Let the ocean have it. Daddy, you might be willing but I will not stay.

 

This had to be a reference to the legend about
there
needing to be a Wendover in the house on New Year’s Eve. Had my grandmother—that strict rationalist who objected to fairytales—actually believed this nonsense? Or had she used this excuse because it was something Kelvin would understand? After all, it would be hard in that day and age to admit that you were running off with a traveling salesman because you were in love, especially if your parent was not entirely rational.

The room darkened as a cloud arranged itself in front of the sun. Suddenly the house felt less charming and more like a honey trap that had drawn me in with the lure of beauty. I put the note back in the Bible and returned it to the shelf.

Though it was early, I decided to eat cereal for an early dinner, using up my milk as quickly as I could. The eggs I would use for breakfast and lunch in some form or other so I could turn off the refrigerator. The generator was quiet as engines go, but it seemed silly to run it for a mostly empty refrigerator, especially with gas being as expensive as it was. And I would be able to hear better without its low throb in the background.

Though I hated the idea, I decided that I needed to go back down to the basement and have another look around before dark. The cat had gotten in there somehow and maybe that existing opening was one that the electrician could use to bring in the wires. And also seal up when he was done.

Whether I stayed on the island or put the house on the market, it needed to be electrified. It wouldn’t be inexpensive because so much of the island was rock, so I needed to find savings where I could.

Kelvin, done sulking upstairs, didn’t mind going down to the basement and I half hoped that he would lead me to his hidden exit, but he just climbed up on the highest shelf and began grooming. Scowling at his uncooperative attitude, I set the lantern on the floor and began removing items from the shelves, dusting them half-heartedly with some kitchen rags before replacing them. The old canning jars were wooly with cobwebs and dust and would need boiling before they could be used again.

My phone rang halfway through the empty canning jars, the forgotten sound scaring me nearly to death.

“Hello?” I gasped when I had fumbled it out of my pocket.

“Hello? Tess, are you there?”

“Jack? Is that you? Wait. I’m in the basement. Give me a sec to get upstairs.” I hurried up the steps but the cat didn’t follow. I had half an urge to bolt the door anyway, but decided to start retraining myself. The basement door being open that first night had made me into a scaredy-cat. The door could stay ajar until the cat reappeared. That would prove that I was a rational adult.

“Jack? Is this better?”

“Much. Look, I just read the paper and saw your announcement. You’re in Maine?”

“Yes, on an island called Little Goose.”

“Should I offer condolences? Was it someone close? I didn’t know you had any family left.”

“My great-grandfather died. I didn’t know that there was anyone left in Maine either, but it turns out there was.
Kelvin Wendover.
He’s left me the house and some other investments.”

There was a pause.

“Are you coming back?” Jack asked bluntly.

“I don’t know. I would come back to pack of course.
And to sell the paper, if I can find a buyer.
Maybe Glory will want it,” I added hopefully. “The thing is that I’m slowly realizing that there just isn’t much else to come back to.”

Jack exhaled and I hoped he wasn’t insulted. Our breaking up had been as much his choice as mine and he had already started looking for a second job.

“I’m rather glad to hear this,” he confessed. “I’ve been dreading telling you, but I’ve had an offer from
The
Trib
and I’m going to take it.
It’s
better money and, well, a chance for more interesting work. Also, it would get me away from Kathy.”

“That’s great,” I said, and tried hard to mean it. This changed the balance of my own equation. Without Jack, the paper would be almost impossible to run. “How’s the leg? Healing up?”

Another pause as Jack accepted that I was changing the subject.

“Yep.
Another two weeks and I’ll be good to go. How are you doing? What are you doing? Do you like living on an island?”

“I … I don’t know. I have a rather interesting neighbor. You’ll be jealous when I tell you.”

“Who?” he demanded, beginning to relax as we got away from personal things.

“Benjamin Livingston.”

“No! I heard he was living in Maine, but what are the chances of him being next door?”

“It’s true. He has one of the three houses on the island.”

“Three houses?
Okay, I want the full story. Are you really living in the back of beyond, or is this a joke?”

So I took a deep breath and started telling him.

“Well, first off, I’ve inherited a cat and there’s no electricity in the house. There is also a curse on the island....”

I talked for half an hour straight and then my phone began beeping, complaining of a tired battery. When I hung up I felt cleansed, but also a little uneasy that I had transferred my angst onto Jack. He had needed to be reassured several times that there was nothing truly sinister about Harris or the island. And there wasn’t. I was just more imaginative than I had ever realized.

I went to the basement door and called the cat. When Kelvin failed to appear, I fetched his food bowl and rattled the
crunchies
. That worked much better. Kelvin and I returned to the kitchen and began considering further food options. I started with washing my grimed hands. The solar panels really did provide hot water as long as the sun was out, but it had wheeled into the west hours ago and the water was only tepid.

My spirit might be cleared by my talk with Jack, but my clothes were a mess. I was going to have to do some laundry. There was the washtub on the back porch, but I could have hot water if I used the bathtub. I wondered if everything would dry overnight if I started laundering at once. Or right after a light but late after-dinner snack.

“I hate doing laundry, Kelvin.
At least by hand.
I wish I had packed more.”

Then I thought of the bedroom upstairs, the blue one with the white counterpane and gilded bedposts. The room I had chosen to sleep in had been empty of clothing, but the blue one had had some clothes in the wardrobe. I hadn’t paid attention to what kind of clothes but my impression was that the previous inhabitant had been of the female gender.

“I wonder….”

Kelvin followed me upstairs and entered the pale blue room without hesitation. Perhaps he felt at home because there was a painting of a similar looking cat on the wall.

There was enough sun to see by without lamplight as long as I held the garments near the window. As I feared, most were inappropriate, silks and delicate linens, arranged so tidily that I could almost see my grandmother folding them. Everything reeked of mothballs, but I found a pair of high-
waisted
slacks in camel wool and a cashmere sweater in a shade of mustard that Grandma Mac had always favored. There was also a pair of jeans in a style my grandmother called dungarees.

“Kelvin, this is my grandmother’s room, isn’t it? And these really are her things?” I asked in a hushed voice, partly repelled but also charmed by the idea that her father had kept them there, waiting for her return.

Kelvin mewed.

“I don’t think she would mind if I borrowed her clothes while I did laundry, do you? Especially not a nightgown,” I said, reaching for the red flannel feedbag hanging from a hook on the back of the door. The slightly stiff gown was not attractive, but it would be warm.

Hesitating a moment, I took the slacks and sweater too. I would need something for tomorrow if the clothes didn’t dry overnight.

The uncharacteristic jumble of shoes on the wardrobe floor were tempting since there were some flats and boots among the satin slippers, but Grandma had been a half-size smaller than I am and the shoes would probably pinch.

“Come out, Kelvin,” I said and then noticed a small painting beside the wardrobe. It was a seagull on a rock, either deliberately done in the style of the impressionists or painted by someone who needed glasses. I squinted at the signature but couldn’t make it out. Could this have been something my grandma painted?
Or perhaps her mother?
I would probably never know. I closed the door softly.

I looked in the tiny drawer of the bedside table, hoping for a forgotten picture or a note or anything that would tell me for sure that this really was my grandmother’s bedroom, but there was nothing personal, not even perfume or a hairbrush. Maybe she had taken everything like that when she left. I liked that idea better than the one where someone—Kelvin or Harris perhaps—had gone through the house and systematically removed anything personal that had belonged to the previous occupants.

Furniture, drapery, linens, food—even the gun—were left behind, but pictures, letters, journals were all gone. The only item that contained any information was the Bible in the library.

Though the lack of personal items made the house seem more like it truly belonged only to me and not the dead, it reinforced the idea that I was being seduced into a beautiful trap, one that had been set and sprung many times before with other
Wendovers
. And someone didn’t want me to know how my predecessors had felt about being caught in it.

The cat mewed and patted my ankle. It was nearing full dark and I hadn’t brought a flashlight.

“Okay, Kelvin, let’s go have a snack. I’ve worked hard today and cereal isn’t cutting it. And I need some tea before bed.”

A strong cup of tea is so prosaic that it denies even the most extraordinary things. It’s why the British drink it in times of crisis. Maybe it would help me sleep.

 

 

Chapter 9

 

The sun winked out while I made tea. The light was somber and then it was gone, sunk in the sea, or so it seemed. Fortunately I had a flashlight on hand.

I read for a time and then tried to sleep, but the subconscious was restless about my tentative decision to move to the island, and bad dreams about my grandmother rowing desperately in a storm roused me again and again.

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